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Journalism

Webpages concerning "Journalism"

News Blues - TV News insiders dish the dirt on America's television newsrooms
http://www.newsblues.com/
Keywords:
television, news, newsroom, news room, tv, tv news, blues, newsblues

http://www.newsblues.com/

Do you have what it takes, ethically and morally, to be a reporter/journalist in today's society? Take this test and find out.
http://www.richardwarrenfield.com/rpt-ap-t.htm
Keywords:
satire, humor, journalism, reporter, aptitude test, personality test

http://www.richardwarrenfield.com/rpt-ap-t.htm

THE DAILY HOWLER is the first post-Socratic press corps review and applies the simplest rules of thought to the exertions of the celebrity press corps.
http://www.dailyhowler.com/
Keywords:
somerby, bob, columnist, columns, writers, authors, greece, greek, conservative, liberal, libertarian, socialist, post-partisan, logic, illogic, politics, political, government, allegations, reason, wing-nuts, wingnuts, politically incorrect, politically correct, left, right, moderate, pundits, republicans, democrats, arianna huffington, chris matthews, rush limbaugh, bill clinton, president, ...

http://www.dailyhowler.com/

Using systematic outreach, IPA gains exposure for progressive perspectives commonly excluded in the mainstream media on the environment, human rights, foreign policy, economic justice and many other issues.
http://www.accuracy.org/
Keywords:
progressive, grassroots, public policy, researchers, media, press, experts, foreign policy, environment, elections, voting, U.S. economy, economic justice, war, environment, human rights, Iraq, news, news release, FAIR, peace, security, reporters, journalists, producers, progressive public relations, independent analysts, alternative media

http://www.accuracy.org/

Journalism News continually updated from thousands of sources around the net.
http://www.topix.net/news/journalism
Keywords:
journalism

http://www.topix.net/news/journalism

Television and radio news operations provide vital information and advice for the public when dangerous storms approach.
http://www.tvrundown.com/
Keywords:
Katrina, Hugo, Gilbert, The Rundown, hurricane, tropical storm, William Gray, Colorado State University, lesson plan, TV, TV news, television, broadcast journalism

http://www.tvrundown.com/

Here you will find anything and everything about Inside the News Network.
http://www.insidetnn.com
Keywords:
Here, you, will, find, anything, and, everything, about, Inside, the, News, Network.

http://www.insidetnn.com

http://chalksidewalk.com/epic/

http://chalksidewalk.com/epic/

http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~jhistory/

http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~jhistory/

http://www.newseum.org/warstories/

http://www.newseum.org/warstories/

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Wikipedia-Article "Journalism"

Topics in Journalism.
Professional concepts

Ethics & News values
Objectivity & Attribution
News source
News & Investigation
Reporting & Writing
Business & Citizen
Alternative & Advocacy
Science journalism
Other Topics & Books

Outside influence

Infotainment & Celebrity
Infotainers & Personalities
Distorted news & VNRs
Yellow journalism
Public relations
Propaganda model

News media

Newspapers & Magazines
Agencies
Broadcasting
Online & Blogging

Roles

Journalists, Reporters, Editors, Anchors, Photojournalists, Visual journalists

Wiki Projects

Journalism Project
Media Project
Members needed

Journalism is a discipline of collecting, verifying, analyzing and presenting information gathered regarding current events, including trends, issues and people. Those who practice journalism are known as journalists.

News-oriented journalism often is described as the "first draft of history." Even though journalists often write news articles to a deadline, news media usually edit and proofread the results prior to publication.

Contents

Reporting and editorializing

Journalism has as its main activity the reporting of events — stating who, what, when, where, why and how, and explaining the significance and effect of events or trends. Journalism exists in a number of media: newspapers, television, radio, magazines and, since the end of 20th century, the Internet.

Generally, publishers and consumers of journalism draw a distinction between reporting — "just the facts" — and opinions (such as editorials, the official opinions of the paper, and op-ed columns, "opposite the editorial page" commentary). However, this distinction sometimes can break down. Journalists may unintentionally fall prey to propaganda or disinformation. (See News management.) Journalists may give a biased account of facts by reporting selectively, for instance, focusing on anecdote or giving a partial explanation of actions. Foreign reporting may become more susceptible to bias, because the writers or editors of a newspaper in a given geographical area may find it more difficult to check the facts in reports about distant places. (See Media bias.)

Feature-writing

Newspapers and periodicals often contain features (see under heading feature style at article news style) written by journalists, many of whom specialize in this form of "in-depth" journalism.

Sources

Journalists' interaction with sources sometimes involves confidentiality. Many Western governments guarantee the freedom of the press. By extension, these freedoms sometimes also add legal protection for journalists, allowing them to keep the identity of a source private even when demanded by police or prosecutors.

Blogging

Recently there has been some controversy as to whether blogging constitutes a form of journalism. There have been arguments on both sides of the debate further fueled by a March 2005 court ruling in a case involving Apple Computer and several Apple rumor blogs. In that ruling the judge declared that the blogs were not entitled to journalist protections with regards to preserving the anonymity of sources because they don't qualify as a form of journalism. This set a legal precedent.

See also

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

Types of journalism

External links

Journalism education

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